This blog will post detailed news items about GLBT issues. Some of the issues include the "don't ask don't tell" policy for gays in the military, and gay marriage. Please note that my main website is DOASKDOTELL.COM (link on my Profile).

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About Me

Since the 1990s I have been very involved with fighting the military "don't ask don't tell" policy for gays in the military, and with First Amendment issues. Best contact is 571-334-6107 (legitimate calls; messages can be left; if not picked up retry; I don't answer when driving) Three other url's: doaskdotell.com, billboushka.com johnwboushka.com Links to my URLs are provided for legitimate content and user navigation purposes only.
My legal name is "John William Boushka" or "John W. Boushka"; my parents gave me the nickname of "Bill" based on my middle name, and this is how I am generally greeted. This is also the name for my book authorship. On the Web, you can find me as both "Bill Boushka" and "John W. Boushka"; this has been the case since the late 1990s. Sometimes I can be located as "John Boushka" without the "W." That's the identity my parents dealt me in 1943!

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

I have covered anti-HIV medications but I don’t think I’ve mentioned the drugs that prevent HIV infection from occurring at all.

NBC News has a detailedstory that an investigational drug could be injected every 60 days and prevent HIV infection for those at risk. There is a related Facebook group The technology is called PrEP, or Pre-exposure prophylaxis. The pills available now (Truvalda) are expensive. Any health care (Obamacare) reform package would have to consider how to pay for this, as it is obviously a sensitive issue from more than one viewpoint (“moral hazard”).

Even now(Obamacare before Trump) it is difficult to pay for these meds, according to a 2015 Daily Beast story.

PrEP medications are often advertised in gay publications, often with pictures of attractive male models. I don’t think anything should be inferred if you recognize a particular model.

NBC linked to several other important stories. One says that gay or bisexual men have a 30% infection rate in some southern cities (including Atlanta but not Dallas). Another says that black gay men have a 50% infection rate. The population as a whole has a 1% infection rate. My own observation in my own circles would suggest that the infection rates are much lower. There is another story which says that HIV may have entered New York City as early as 1970, and moved to San Francisco in 1976. But Randy Shilts (in “And the Band Played On”) had suggested that HIV could have arrived in the US about 1976 and the Tall Ships bicentennial celebration in NYC that Independence Day.

I moved into New York City in September 1974 and left for Dallas in January 1979. In 1978, I started hearing stories of some unusual illnesses. Until then, Hepatitis B was well known, and I was vaccinated for that in 1982. Syphilis and gonorrhea were well known. Hepatitis A was also common. In New Jersey and a few other US locations, there were some mystery clusters of Hodgkin’s lymphoma that some doctors thought had been virally transmitted.

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Aaron Belkin, of the Palm Center in Los Angeles (I visited him there in February 2002), reports that the Family Research Council has been trying to capitalize on Trump’s election (and particularly on some of his proposed opponents) by suggesting that military readiness demands rolling back the repeal of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” and even return to the absolute ban, possibly in response to some abstract theories in Mattis’s book (“Warriors and Citizens”). The FRC also has a paper criticizing the Pentagon over the transgender policy, here.

Thursday, December 22, 2016

North Carolina’s legislature has failed to repeal its notorious HB 2, which drove McCroy out of office. This is the so-called “bathroom bill”.

Yes (to quote gay libertarian and Trump supporter Peter Thiel), the world may have bigger issues than bathroom use. And yes, some of it could have been reasonable if there is a reasonable procedure to change one’s stated gender as a matter of legal record (although parental consent is needed for minors). But some transgender people say they can’t use any public bathroom at all.

But the bill went further, banning communities from passing their own anti-discrimination ordinances. One attempt to broker a deal had meant a 6-month suspension of any local ordinances.

German Lopez on Vox has an op-ed“North Carolina Republicans just chose anti-LGBTQ discrimination over jobs for their constituents”.

Indeed, sports events and concerts have been canceled. North Carolina has been a tech hub, especially around Charlotte and around Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill (with all the universities like Duke and UNC). This attitude almost sounds like “Brexit” of “Trump-xit” inasmuch a substantial, largely rural population, resents the hyper-individualism and secularism of modern life coming to the South.

In retirement at 73, may downsize in 2017, and I have thought about Charlotte or Raleigh-Durham as possible areas. But I wouldn’t consider it with such an anti-business, anti-modern attitude surfacing.

Update: Dec. 25

NBC explains how gerrymandering contributes to maintaining the fanatical, job-destroying socially conservative extremism in post-Jesse Helms North Carolina, here. Conservative legislators vote this way "because they can" get away with it.

The bill would allow private entities to discriminate against individual consumers on specific religious grounds: (1) that marriage is between one man and one woman (2) that sexuality should be contained within heterosexual marriage, where there is openness to procreation. Some state laws, like Mississippi’s, as proposed or passed, are similar, but may add the idea that people’s behavior must conform to their birth biological genders (which as a matter or medical science is not always absolutely clear-cut).

The bill might be arguably unconstitutional (ironically in First Amendment terms) because it favors one or more specific religious beliefs (found with conservative branches of most faiths) over others.

O’Hara gives a link to another NBC story that socially-based discrimination is bad for most mainstream businesses. Indeed, that is so. This sounds like something that happens on the fringes.

I don’t think it would affect mainstream workplaces (or regular commercial businesses operated as public accommodations). Already, people who work specifically for churches can be compelled to behave personally according to church doctrine (as we witness the firings of some Catholic school teachers). Well, maybe not. Look at this new litigation in Georgia over a firing of a Catholic school teacher over gay marriage. Jamie Manson weighs in on the moral dilemma a Catholic school in Philadelphia felt over another case, but it felt it needed to protect its religious identity, here. This is a little bit personal. I am not Catholic, but sometimes play in chess tournaments ("Chess for Charity") hosted by a Catholic school near Tyson’s Corner. I’ve known people who said they hard worked for parochial schools and got fired for being “found out”.
The bill would seem to “protect” faith-based organizations that get public funds. Would the Boy Scouts of America, or Boy Scout troops, start discriminating again? If they get public funds, they’re not completely private (as in the 2000 Supreme Court case).

More to the point, is to ask why groups want to do this? As noted above, some people see beliefs about sexuality and marriage as part of a religious or tribal identity, an idea that seems intellectually shallow to me. More disturbing is the idea that a group that promotes exclusion of (younger) gay men or teens, in particular, thinks it is pandering to the idea that parents want as much lineage (as many grandchildren) as possible. That’s what happens in Russia, where Vladimir Putin exploits the idea that public homosexual speech discourages marginal boys (the old fashioned idea of “waverers”, as disturbing as it sounds) from wanting to have children, and Russia has a big population implosion (“demographic winter”) problem.

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

I have already reported today on my main (“BillBoushka”) entry on Blogger about an important lawsuit filed by the families of at least three of the victims of the Pulse Nightclub attack by an ISIS sympathized Mateen on June 12 in Orlando, against Facebook, Twitter, and Google.

The Orlando Sentinel now has an even more detailed story by Gal Tziperman Lotan.

At issue is the way Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act is interpreted, and I’ll be delving into this in more detail on Wordpress soon. This could be a very important case for testing free speech on the Internet (since it has to be “hosted” somehow), aside from the specific issues for the LGBT community and the victims.

I understand that the owner wants to rebuild the club on the same site rather than build a memorial and move the club. I visited it in July 2015, and a good friend (from the West Coast) had visited it two weeks before the attack. I have other social media contacts in Florida who often come into the Orlando area and would visit the club. Any one of us could have been victims. The nearby theme parks, by Disney and Universal, do have some comprehensive security.

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

When I got to the Arlington AGLA party last night, I was also told about Susan Olsen aka Cindy Brady’s (from “The Brady Bunch”) homophobic rant, described here in Papermag,for example. She had hosted “Two Chics Ralkin’ Politics” and had apparently perturbed openly gay actor Leon Acord Whiting.

So LA Talk Radio severed its ties with “Olsen”. The angry interchange is rather entertaining and silly.

Here's a rundownfrom the Daily Beast on other infamous celebrity homophohic rants.

Bad boy and dreaded Breitbart “faggot” Milo Yiannopoulos has a posting, “OSU remembers attacker as victim of police violence,”. That refers to Abdul Razak Ali Artan, who stabbed some students at Ohio State University Nov. 28 before being shot by a campus policeman. And his rampage is believed to be inspired by ISIS.

Milo is indeed a real life Shane Lyons. Most of his posts seem to be legitimate attacks on mandatory political correctness, groupthink, and identity politics – not on people. “Most people walk in the direction they’re headed.”

Milo also writes how "Donald Trump made it cool to be gay again", on Breitbart, here. Like be subversive. Or always get what you want (the way Shane does, especially if what you want is "Danny"). Update: Dec. 22

Yet when you read the individual pieces, most of the scenarios are about fringe-like situations that don’t occur for most LGBT people. So even Milo might have fun with this one.

But there is a nasty undertone to some of this. That is, when HIV-infection is regarded under the umbrella of chosen behavior and personal responsibility, a lot of times the politics do not turn out well. Moral hazard is a touchy subject, which, you could say, tends to divide people.

There is still a slim possibility that legal challenges (involved with the Russian hacking) could prevent Trump from becoming president -- but then would he be Pence?

Update: later today

This postby "bad boy" Milo Yiannopolous may be disconcerting; it refers to letting women serve in combat. But there are individual women quite capable of serving in combat, just as there are individual transgender people, even if infrequent.

The post literally would not apply to gay men, who have the same biology as far as strength and metabolism as straight men (most of the time).

I think it's inevitable that Major League Baseball will see a transgender player eventually, probably a pitcher (especially relief pitcher).

In the meantime: is Milo the real-life incarnation of the character Shane Lyons from "Judas Kiss"?

Sunday, December 11, 2016

The Washington Blade has a stunning front page story by Gtreg Marzullo, a special to the Blade, “LGBT detainees describe harrowing life inside Eloy”

The booklet-length story is not as visible on the website as in print.

Eloy is described as a privately run detention center in Arizona run by CCA. The state has stricter than usual laws on detaining undocumented immigrants. Furthermore federal law requires detention of many at the border if they are not sent back. Actually, I had been under the impression that every asylum seeker detained at the Mexican border is held until a relative, private individual (unlikely if not known to the detainee already) or social services group agrees to support him or her. Who pays for the health care bills or HIV treatment if necessary?

The story is detailed and requires a lot of study for its implications.

Wednesday, December 07, 2016

CNN’s Sanjay Gupta covered the subject of intersex persons this morning, who are not quite the same as transgender. He presented an intersex singer living as a woman.

There is an earlier article in July on CNN, about someone who could not get a gender-neutral passport approved by the State Department. http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/23/us/veteran-intersex-passport-lawsuit.

Saturday, December 03, 2016

Peter Bergen, CNN national security analyst, has a column today "Inside the mind of 'Mad Dog' Mattis" about the likely Defense Secretary's views, and some of these views could affect advances made in the military in recent years regarding "LGBTQ people."

The comments concern a recent book "Warriors and Citizens" from the Hoover Press (published August 2016, edited by Karl Schakey and Mattis) with an essay by Mattis, "The Mattis Way of War".

Mattis is concerned about the relationship between the civilian world and the military which serves it. But Bergen's piece notes a criticism of social goals, which include repealing past bans on open gays in the military and now transgender soldiers and sometimes the use of women in combat, as disregarding the "atavistic" nature of the way the military regard war, especially with an enemy that has less concern for human rights than we have. So we have to be better than that.

I have downloaded the book on Kindle (the print copy is out of stock on Amazon) and will review it soon.

Friday, December 02, 2016

The Washington Blade reports, in an article by Stephen Forsell, that the appointment of Tom Price (R-Ga) to be secretary of HHS, is bad for LGBT people, article here.

His history is that of opposing repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”, voting against ENDA, and supporting a constitutional amendment to support what George W. Bush had called “the sanctity of marriage” in 2004. There is fear that he could support funds for conversion therapy. There is a sensation that he is anti-science and many of his ideas don’t concur with modern medical thinking.

One could wonder (on World AIDS Day, especially) if the funding of prescription protease inhibitors for people with HIV could be an issue. Medical advances have made the side effects of protease inhibitors much less problematic than in the past.

Of great concern, too, is not only repeal or a take-down of “Obamacare”, but also a gradual replacement of Medicare with premium supports for seniors to buy private insurance.

Update: Dec. 3

I'll put a negative story about HIV that I saw, regarding a VA doctor who could have infected up to 600 people with HIV, Hepatitis B, or Hepatitis C (both of which can be asymptomatic in people with stronger immune systems but possibly lead to liver cancer later in life), for reusing the same instruments, which may have been his name, McClatchy storyhere.

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Lambda Legal has written up a case of a community college
teacher (Kim Hively) in Indiana fired after being seen kissing her girlfriend,
as a way to cover LGBT people or “behavior” under more general Federal law
protections based on gender itself.

Pence, who has attracted attention for talking about conversion therapy in 2000, is now quoted as saying that gays (LGTBQ) should be left alone as individuals but not singled out as a class for protection. Under Obama, the US has been able to promote the class idea in some marginal countries.

Nevertheless, Russia, for example, has become much more anti-gay under Putin, passing an anti-gay propaganda law in 2013 that seems motived not just by equating homosexuality to interest in minors, but specifically to fears about low birth rates.

Trump says that gay marriage is settled law and does not bother him, but that gays and lesbians, like anyone else, need security at home from militant violence from foreign sources, mostly tied to radical Islam.

Trump and Pence seem to suggest that involvement in anti-gay policies of some countries (like in Africa) could complicate other relations with those countries, but anti-gay policies overseas can seriously hamper business and charitable work now. It could lead to more asylum claims at home.

Monday, November 28, 2016

There’s some nasty stuff on Facebook right now claiming that Mike Pence wants to divert funding from AIDS vaccines and treatment research to “conversion therapy”. Hopefully, he no longer believes this, but I can’t say we’re sure based on any recent statements.

Of course, mandatory and even voluntary conversion therapy is illegal now in a number of states. But I did check around a bit.

Buzzfeed also has the link, which accentuates the idea of changing sexual behavior (to heterosexual??) to reduce the risk of spreading or amplifying HIV (a right wing argument from hardliners in Texas in the early 1980s).

Saturday, November 26, 2016

A Washington Post storytoday by Adam Taylor describes the
“disinformation” campaign by the Soviet Union during the Cold War, which
included a story in July of 1983 (nine months before the HIV HTLV-3 discovery
was announced) that AIDS was a manmade disease originating in the
Pentagon. The New York Native (Charles Ortleb’s
paper) had augmented these claims with bizarre theories about an arbovirus,
AFSV (African Swine Fever), and about a facility at Plum Island on Long Island.

A possible result is a survey on 2005 showing about half of
Africans believe that AIDS is an American invention, which could help explain
rabidly anti-gay attitudes (and their easy exploitation by politicians) in
Africa.

An arbovirus would have made the disease politically even
more dangerous, as insects could have spread the disease to other communities
(maybe that was part of the thinking behind the draconian anti-gay law proposed
in Texas in 1983). Theoretically, the
same claims could be made about Zika today.

New trials of a moderately successful HIV vaccine will start
in South Africa soon (story). This may be related to recent
advances in Australia.

Friday, November 25, 2016

For Thanksgiving Day I did visit the DC Center in Washington
DC for a seating at 2 PM for a family-style dinner sponsored by Center Global and Center Aging.

There were perhaps 40 people. A few (including some women and all well
known groups) did say they were asylum seekers.
The group went around with introductions and favorite holidays. One woman, an area resident, said Ramadan,
because of the contemplation and self-sacrifice involved.

I had brought a pie from Food and Friends, but so had a lot
of other people. There was plenty of
turkey, dressing, sweet potatoes, regular potatoes, and kale.

Before the dinner, people played Blokus in the public
room. The “Blues” (Hillary) won over the
Reds, the Yellows (Libertarians) and Greens (Jill Stein), So maybe that’s an omen for Hillary’s
possibly doing a recount. (Read Tim Lee's article in Vox about Jill Stein's election recount fund-raising, which he says has some mathematical and ethical merit -- the writer, a libertarian-leaning socially liberal conservative, and probably, at 36, a pretty fit candidate for office if the GOP noticed, supports her effort to provide another check at least on the integrity of the election.)

There’s another op-ed in the Washington Post Friday morning
that conceivably could bear on the asylum seeker situation, by Zachary Price, “Entrapping the Dreamers", The op-ed reassures that the INS cannot use
information that undocumented children used in applying for Obama’s DACA
program.

Generally, the mood of the group was good. There seems to be a general impression that
Trump is not likely carry out his early campaign threats of aggressive
deportations (leading to more asylum claims), because it would be almost impossible
to do, and because police departments and other law enforcement discourage the
idea.

I spoke to one person quite privately about my own
involvement. I am still playing “email tag” on this matter. Nothing specific was said, but we will follow
up in the week that starts with Monday November 28. I got the impression that right now providing
assistance or hosting outside of the District and the most accessible areas
from Metro is quite difficult.

There is another group called TASSC (Torture Abolition
Survivors and Support Coalition) which has anoutdoor run event Dec.4in DC. I
have been told that they had operated a shelter. There is an Asylum Women’s Empowerment Group
in Baltimore but I have little
information and there seems to be a small shelter in Baltimore run by the
Mennonite Church, but I have no other details right now.

Thursday, November 24, 2016

When it comes to anti-gay laws and culture, it seems like eastern Africa is now the absolutely bottom.

The Washington Post has a front page story Thanksgiving morning “Oppressed African gays now face loss of HIV aid”, or, online, “Tanzania suspends U.S. funded AIDS program in new crackdown on gays”, a story by Kevin Sieff. The ban was announced in October (before the provocative US election) after the “health minister” Hamoso Kigwangalla, said that HIV treatment programs promote male homosexuality. Then in October Ummy Mwalimu stated that US HIV programs were suspended to examine whether they encourage same-sex relationships.

The program had been called PEPFAR, or the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, actually instituted during the Bush administration.

The political situation for gays in Tanzania has deteriorated since the election of Magufuli, through his political appointments. One governor, Paul Makonda, threatened to arrest all those who friend or follow “known homosexuals” on Facebook. This is the first time I have heard of social a draconian threat involving social media. It isn’t hard to imagine how that could lead to more asylum claims in the U,S. – men who had behaved “straight” but then self-outed on social media when on visas in the United States or western countries.

The article also mentions “anal tests” for past receptive homosexual activity as being done in Uganda and upheld by the courts. I had never heard ot this,

The rhetoric reminds me of the extreme right in Texas in the early days of the AIDS epidemic, when a group called “Dallas Doctors Against AIDS”, seeing AIDS as driven by “conduct” within a circumscribed group, tried to push a draconian enhancement of the sodomy law through the Texas legislature in the spring on 1983. It did not get out of committee.

The rabidly anti-gay policies of some sub-Saharan countries (which seem like a political exploitation or religion and of certain beliefs about group fertility) would make it very hard for many western companies to send technical workers there, or for non-profits and churches to aid them.

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Australian researchers are reporting a promising new approach for an HIV vaccine, by piggy-backing it on a common cold virus (which is RNA) and also on a harmless DNA virus, to produce very early defenses to keep the virus from entering T helper cells, An ABC affiliate in Australia reports here.

Time Magazine, p. 38 of the Nov. 28 issue, “The Race to Zero”, by Alice Park, describes efforts to eliminate HIV transmission by 2030. It is still more commonly transmitted among lower income gay men (especially of color) than other groups. Anecdotally, obvious disease is not common among “everyday” gay social circles as it was 20 years ago.

An article in Time this summer indicates that antiretroviral drugs may stop the transmission of HIV even without condoms. It seems as though side effects are probably minimal for most men. But of course the meds have to be paid for.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Patricia Kutteles, who fought for the end of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” has passed away at 67.

Kutteles was the mother of PFC Barry Winchell, who was beaten to death by a homophobic soldier, now in prison, after taunts, at a post in Kentucky, in 1999. The New York Times story by Sam Roberts is here.

Winchell’s murder was depicted in the 2003 Showtime film “Soldier’s Girl”. SLDN (now Outserve) gave considerable coverage to the incident when it happened.

The Lifetime movie “Any Mother’s Son” (1996) had depicted the murder in Sasebo, Japan of Navy Sailor Allen Schindler in 1992 (before Clinton’s DADT) in another homophobic attack. Scattered incidents happened throughout the 1990s, including one while I was on vacation in 1994 which, when I read about it in a local Colorado newspaper in a diner, inspired me to my first DADT book.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Jim Downs, a history professor at Connecticut college, has created controversy by claiming that Peter Thiel is not “gay”, and then espouses his antipathy to “gay” Republicans (Log Cabin) and probably libertarians in a controversial Advocate article on Facebook this morning.

I have some antipathy to “identity politics” and behaving out of group “solidarity”. I don’t get my sense of identity by belonging to a group, which makes both the Left and Right potentially dangerous to me.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

It also reports on the extreme poverty of some transgender people here.

The press release:

This year marks the deadliest year on record for trans people, and with the current political climate, it could get even worse. Now more than ever is a time honor the lives lost and educate others on how to make the world a safer space for this community.

Committed to changing the wave of discrimination and offer a safe space, St. John’s Well Child and Family Center created and implemented the Transgender Health Program (THP), the only Los Angeles community clinic with a comprehensive transgender-focused health program and one of only five in the nation.
They are hosting two events focused on this message and mission:

•2nd Annual Transgender Day of Remembrance: Friday November 18 from 12pm – 2pm
oGuests and speakers include members of the Los Angeles Police Department and the L.A. City Mayor’s Office along with St. John’s staff and transgender patients.
•Transgender Town Hall: Tuesday, November 22 from 10am-3pm
oSpeakers include Trans Activist President & CEO Trans Latina Coalition, Bamby Salcedo and Adrian Acencion Martinez, Community Organizer at theTransgender Law Center to discuss daily obstacles this community faces and long-term solutions in this political climate.
WHERE: 808 W. 58TH ST., Los Angeles, CA 90037, Megan Noller, O: 855.438.3553 C: 424.634.8370

Monday, November 14, 2016

A story by Rowan Scarborough in the Washington Times reports that the new defense secretary will be pressured to restore “warrior mentality” in the US military, link here, calling for the need for a “counter-revolution” to reverse social engineering. The specific concerns were about transgender troops in the military, women in infantry, and the use of the word “man” in certain areas of military correspondence. The call was for a return to “warrior mentality”, which sounds like an attack on changes in gender roles.

There was an interchange on Facebook today about the extent and significance of VP elect Mike Pence’s homophobia. I attracted ire by maintaining that some religious freedom bills are no big deal, and tend to rarely matter. But it is true, that a public accommodation for profit or a commercial business open to the public should not be allowed to discriminate against customers on gender-related issues or anything else. In some areas of the country, that could add to more divisions and libertarian arguments might not always work. But inside a church, religious groups can do what they want They should consider why what others do matters to them so much.

President-elect Trump says that same-sex marriage is settled law and he has no objection to it. Abortion is another matter. But he has asked Justice Ginsberg to resign today (WSJ)!

The New York Post has a somewhat reassuringpieceon what a Trump administration will do here (was in Rick Sincere's Daily Paper from Charlottesville, also).Nov. 16

But Pink News reports that Trump has considered that he would appoint William Pryor, former Alabama attorney general, who tried to defend the Texas sodomy law before Lawrence v. Texas., story by Patrick McCormick. (shared on Facebook by Jack Andraka, who wanted to give Trump "a chance").

Friday, November 11, 2016

The Arlington Gay and Lesbian Alliance (AGLA) held its 35th Anniversary reception and dinner tonight at the Hyatt Regency in Crystal City.

The menu included chicken and rice, no Cornish game hen (a past favorite of SLDN).

Speakers included someone who defended the necessity of drag as a political statement, then TJ Flavell (president), then a Virginia State senator (Ebbin), a transgender assistant Defense Secretary (for energy procurement), and Gavin Grimm, plaintiff in a major transgender case regarding school bathroom use, before the US Supreme Court (story). There was also a telling of the sorry story of the Marshall Newman amendment, from 2006, which had tried to ban gay marriage in Virginia.

Wednesday, November 09, 2016

How bad is it? That is, Donald Trump’s upcoming presidency for LGBTQ people? To be fair, off the bat, Trump has said very little about LGBTQ, although Peter Thiel spoke openly at the convention, and Trump (stumbling over the "Q") said that the greatest threat to gay people was crime and terrorism, like it is for everyone else, he claims. He did discuss the atrocity at the Pulse in Orlando in graphic terms in one of his speeches at the convention.

Vox has an alarming article by German Lopez, but the details aren’t quite as alarming as the hysterical title of the article. Vox offers its usual card stack on trangender problems,

Slate has an article "Yes, Donald Trump would be a catastrophe for LGBTQ rights in America" by Mark Joseph Stern, Most of the details are remote technical arguments related to federal funding that in practice rarely come up for many more affluent LGBT people (who may be more likely to identify with LCR, below, or with libertarianism). Yet, I know of serious cases even in IT. In 2006, a contractor was fired because a client in Wyoming wouldn't work with LGBT people. ENDA would not get far in the new regime.

David Mariner of DC Center Global also as a nice article, “The New Normal”, emphasizing mental health, here. He predicts the gay community will be playing defense.

Kevin Naff, editor of the Washington Blade, lists some predictions here. He does fear that Trump could stop the integration of transgender into the military, if viewed as a frivolous complication for combat deployments. (I'm not yet finding much concern that the repeal of "Don't Ask Don't Tell" could be undone, against the advice of military commanders now.) Whether gay marriage would be undermined by a future Supreme Court sounds somewhat unlikely. But religious freedom laws (by states) are likely to be upheld, although in practice relatively few employers and businesses ever try to use them, and there is tremendous practical pressure from big time sports (MLB, NFL, NBA) on states not to implement these laws.

And the “bathroom bill” matter is likely to stall. I’ve never been personally too concerned about the bathroom issue, but a recent AGLA forum on the matter made it clear that some transgender teens feel that they cannot safely use any bathroom in public schools.

Log Cabin Republicans , on Sept. 30, maintained that Trump is not a threat to LGBTQ progress, although in some areas progress could stall. One point concerns “New York Values”, which Ted Cruz had accused Trump of having.

A few prominent LGBTQ people in sciences and in entertainment have expressed disgust at the election (with the four-letter word in tweets). There is particular disgust at Trump’s implicit racism among young adult white gay men. No one counts on remaining privileged forever.

Trump’s adult kids (especially the oldest, Donald Jr, who will run dad’s real estate empire) seem a lot more responsible and temperate in what they say than The Donald himself.

Update: Nov. 10

The Washington Times claims that Trump actually held an LGBT flag in Colorado, brief story.

The National Organization for Marriage announced its agenda, which exposes its addiction to the idea of monopolizing and controlling other people's relationships.Update: Nov12

A Facebook post that I am tagged in suggests the Pence has reaffirmed that LGBTQ rights will go (as Pence speaks to "homophobic" groups on the religious rignt. If you read the actually ("US Uncut") link, which indeed does pander to fears of the Christian right, all Pence really says is that he respect individual religious freedom. The headline as a lot of hyperbole.

The latest Blade list on XO's that Trump could undo is at the end of thisarticle. It would be possible to deny same-sex married partners equal immigration consideration.

Peter Thiel is part of the Trump transition team, but that's good mainly on the clean energy and power grid security issues (because Thiel has supported inventor Taylor Wilson).

Thursday, November 03, 2016

David Mariner, from the DC Center for the LGBT Community, wrote a long piece on Facebook this morning about “forums” for LGBT older adults -- somewhat in reaction to an AARP proposal to hold a forum in Ward 4. But this is really a piece about forums based on “identity politics”.

You may need to be logged on to Facebook to view the post. It would be nice to see the Blade run this.

It’s hard for me to wrap around the idea of another “group” because I’ve stayed so independent. But you go into any assisted living center, and find the ambition level for most residents very low, and the need for stimulation high – with the exception of a tech savvy elderly person with physical disabilities but a computer in his room (I saw that in a visit to Ohio in 2006).

Tuesday, November 01, 2016

Since I have considered the possibility of hosting an asylee and can’t say how this is going to turn out (I'll detail some considerations from my own situation angle on Wordpress soon), I was at least hesitant to report these stories immediately.

But I’ll pass along a couple links from the Blade without much comment.

One of them concerns the arrival of at least two activists from Venezuela, as reported by Michael Lavers in the Washington BladehereMonday. The Washington Post has a story about Venezuela's barring of journalists.

The other is a story about the apparent disappearance of an asylum seeker and physician from Zambia, someone who had been working with the Global Health Corps .

The. Lavers story on this incident is here. But there is a lot of background, much of it bizarre, in a Twitter index here. Any visitor who know anything material about this matter is encouraged to contact the Washington DC Police Department at the number shown.

Update: Nov. 3

At midday Nov. 2, the Washington DC Police Department tweeted that the Zambian asylum seeker had been found and was safe. The Blade just put up a story this morning here.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

I visited The Lodge, east of Hagerstown MD on US 40, on the western side of South Mountain, last night, for variety (as Halloween parties could get more difficult in DC without Metro late). I hadn't been there since 2012.

The crowd built up very early, by 10 PM. The outdoor patio lounge is decorated a bit to look like an alien planet garden. The dance floor also filled quickly.

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